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So, I came recently to watch this video, which explains Olber's paradox and how it was solved with the big bang theory, doppler shift etc.

My question can be split into a more physical question and a practical observation:

Physical question: is it still a paradox even if we do not count with the more hardcore cosmology (so, universe expansion, doppler shift) and simply go about showing that the observable universe is not that uniform? What would the light intensity integral be for an infinite universe with an infinite age while assuming the rest of the universe has the same galaxy/star density as we currently know?

If the answer to the above question actually shows that the ratio is still 1 as in the Olbers' paradox, what is the difference, for a universe with the same age as ours, between the light intensity for the visible spectrum considering it static (no red-shifts, so no acceleration/expansion, just like it would be frozen but just has the same age) and the currently seen one?

practical observation: I mean, even in practical terms there are only a handful of galaxies which can be seen with the naked eye. If you ever tried to see Andromeda without aid, you know you need to use your rods and not your cones and its damn hard to see. In our own galactic cluster and supercluster we can but see a few out of the hundreds of thousands of them with the naked eye. Galactic clusters are indiscernible. What I am getting at, is that I do not see the compounding effect mentioned in the Olbers' paradox. Things become too small with too low flux (and stars compacted together instead of uniformly scattered) to see with the naked eye. In other words, it seems to me that the ratio between the stars in a solid-angle volume at different distances and the decay in light intensity is still lower than 1 with our current knowledge of the galactic positioning.

EDIT: TL;DR: I think that stars are more spaced out than light intensity fall-off as they conglomerate into galaxies, and also, any star will block background stars in its solid angle and there's a limit to the distance a star would be visible for the human eye, so, altogether dark sky would still be dark even for an infinite one (my opinion). I think Olbers' paradox is solely a paradox due to its over simplification: not counting with solid-angles and actual star distribution and limits to human vision.

Qmechanic
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  • "any star will block background stars in its solid angle". Not quite, since the incoming energy isn't obliterated. It's mostly absorbed and re-radiated, and some of the energy may be reflected. – PM 2Ring Feb 26 '21 at 16:34
  • yes, but for a practical you could say it shifts the peak of emission of the star's black body radiation by warming it up (and of course increases its output) but if instead of 3 photons/s on earth's surface from that star, we get 3.3 photons/s, I'm not sure that makes a huge difference. – José Andrade Feb 26 '21 at 16:40

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Let's suppose the universe is infinitely old, the galaxy distribution is homogeneous (the same everywhere) and isotropic (the same in every direction) and stars are constantly being replenished as they die out.

Then you are right that seeing an individual star becomes increasingly difficult as you try to see stars further away, since the intensity of an individual star decreases as $1/r^2$, where $r$ is the distance from the star to your eyes. You are also right that if you see one star along the line of sight, you won't see any additional stars at larger distances along the same line of sight.

However, there are also more stars in a fixed solid angle at a given distance. The number of stars in a solid angle scales as $r^2.$

The intensity in a given solid angle on the sky is then the intensity of one star, $\sim r^{-2}$, times the number of stars in that solid angle, $\sim r^2$. Since these two effects exactly cancel, you would expect the intensity of light in each solid angle to be approximately the same, given our starting assumptions -- that is Olber's paradox.

Andrew
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  • I understand Olber's paradox, but again practical evidence does not stack up. Also, the sun blocks about 0.5° of sky, other stars do the same, as stars "compound" they block back portions of the sky. For the sky to be bright, we would need way more light input than that given by far away stars "in the nooks and crannies". They are just too far and just a few photons reach us. Olber's paradox is too over-simplified, it assumes stars are "transparent" and uniformly distributed. – José Andrade Feb 26 '21 at 16:31
  • Or in other words, I am arguing against the uniformity of the universe and the limits to human vision. Both of which are not taken into account in the paradox. I think that the easiest calculation would be show whats the average distance of stars to cover 99.99% of the sky and show that that distance is already too far to compound in any actual brightness for a human (I believe that distance is even much smaller than our current universe's size) – José Andrade Feb 26 '21 at 16:36
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    @JoséAndrade Sorry but you evidently don't understand Olber's paradox :) Nothing in it requires that stars be transparent. For the solid angle containing the sun, the sun provides the intensity we see, and we don't see anything behind the sun. It also is not correct to say that the faraway stars are "too far away and only a few photons reach us." At a large distance, any individual star is dim, but there are many more stars at a large distance in a given solid angle, and the collective effect of all the faraway stars is the same as one (hypothetical) nearby star taking up the same solid angle. – Andrew Feb 26 '21 at 16:40
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    "Limits to human vision" is not relevant, because the point is that the faraway stars should collectively be just as visible as the sun. "Uniformity of the universe" is relevant, and if having a non-uniform universe is a solution to the paradox since you would break one of the starting assumptions that led to the paradox to begin with. However, this is not the correct solution in our universe. – Andrew Feb 26 '21 at 16:44
  • Yes, you are right, it does not state that they are transparent. But still something is off. The math checks out, but its an oversimplified model. In practical terms its not true. (I might add a picture I took of the milky way core) – José Andrade Feb 26 '21 at 16:45
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    @JoséAndrade Of course in reality the night sky is dark -- so any experimental evidence will contradict the conclusion of Olber's paradox. But the conclusion to draw from this is that at least one of the assumptions that went into Olber's argument must be wrong. All of the assumptions seem very reasonable when you first encounter them, so then the question is, which assumption is wrong? It turns out that the finite age of the Unverse, plus the idea that "stars are replenished constantly", are both not right -- if you go back far enough in the Universe's history, there are no stars. – Andrew Feb 26 '21 at 16:49
  • I can't seem to shake off the feeling, that even those should not play a part. I cannot see any galaxy, or galaxies behind those. We can't see most stars in the milky way. When looking at the core of the milky way (which can be "brightish") the closest we can get to a wall of stars, which completely cover the backdrop of the rest of the universe, its still dark, and not because of the age or any other more modern findings. And these are all stars very, very close to us. – José Andrade Feb 26 '21 at 16:55
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    @JoséAndrade the Milky Way is very finite in number of stars and physical extent. It's nothing at all like an infinitely old, infinitely large universe. – Christopher James Huff Feb 26 '21 at 16:58
  • (Yes, Ober's paradox assumes also that the energy will be infinite and that gas/dust clouds would also be basically re-emitting light, but the paradox focuses mainly on stars per solid angle and intensity) – José Andrade Feb 26 '21 at 16:59
  • @ChristopherJamesHuff Just went to check, I thought the "zone of avoidance" was blocking a much higher percentage of the backdrop (apparently its only 20%). EDIT: 20% of the whole night sky, I thought of just the background. So, my argument is that if I look in one direction and in that direction already 100% of my solid angle is filled and its still dark, even with close stars, that looking to other patches, with further stars, 100% will not be brighter. – José Andrade Feb 26 '21 at 17:04
  • Guys, I guess my problem lies on the fact that it's called a paradox. Like Zeno's paradox, of course it is not a paradox when getting closer to reality, but it is a mathematical paradox, when assuming infinite energy, infinite universe etc. What tickled me is that it's a paradox arising from observation, while Zeno's is more of a thought experiment. As it arises from observation I wanted to discard it as being a paradox, but of course, as soon as we play by the rules of assumptions, it becomes a paradox. Sorry for taking so much of your time, I feel stupid now. – José Andrade Feb 26 '21 at 17:20
  • (I will nonetheless also write another answer to this question, and as time permits add to it answering the questions I posed, but I will accept Andrew's answer, as it states the actual paradox and not my rant on observation vs. thought experiment) – José Andrade Feb 26 '21 at 17:22
  • @JoséAndrade I would say Olber's paradox (or whatever name you want to give it) is a strawman argument which derives an obviously wrong conclusion from a set of apparently reasonable assumptions. The game is then to establish exactly what is wrong with the argument -- is it one of the assumptions, or one of the logical steps? Such logical games are very useful in physics, since the resolution tends to involve a key new insight. Other examples include the ultraviolet catastrophe (solved via quantum mechanics) and the black hole information loss paradox (no universally accepted solution). – Andrew Feb 26 '21 at 18:22
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    @JoséAndrade In Fractals: Form, Chance and Dimension, Mandelbrot shows another resolution of Olber's paradox which even works in an eternal universe. If the distribution of stars has a low enough fractal dimension, then the sky will be dark. I guess not everyone would agree that such a distribution is strictly uniform, but neither is the hierarchical distribution of stars in galaxies & clusters of galaxies in the real universe. ;) – PM 2Ring Feb 26 '21 at 22:02
  • @PM2Ring That sounds great. I will take a look at it! – José Andrade Feb 27 '21 at 01:00
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One should keep in mind what Olbers' paradox says. (From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olbers'_paradox#The_paradox .) "The paradox is that a static, infinitely old universe with an infinite number of stars distributed in an infinitely large space would be bright rather than dark." These assumptions were not countered with astronomical evidence until the Hubble Law phenomenon was discovered in 1912 and later understood in 1922 (Friedmann) and 1927 (Lemaitre). Hubble published the "Law" named for him in 1929. (See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hubble%27s_law#Discovery .)

Buzz
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There is no paradox, even under classical physics.

Olbers posed the supposed paradox in 1823.

It wasn't until more than a century later that interstellar extinction, or the attenuation of light due to non-luminous matter absorbing photons, was formally documented.

Olbers's Paradox consequently actually fails to demonstrate a finite or nonuniform universe, by failing to account for a now-known phenomenon of light extinction. Matter is known to attenuate light according to an exponential decay law (see the Beer-Lambert attenuation law). The law of optical attenuation had in fact been known, studied and published on by 1729 and before. What had not been as well studied is the role of interstellar matter specifically in obscuring stars. Hence the seeming "paradox" was merely a failure to account for something that is in fact there.

Oddly, those arguing against the existence and prevalence of such matter are asking us to presuppose the non-existence of planets, moons, asteroids, dust and gas (from which the stars themselves are said to form), nebulae, dark matter (upon which modern astrophysical theories rely and even say it is five times as prevalent as ordinary matter), etc.

Visible effects of interstellar absorptive matter

I have written a basic simulation to validate the effects of non-luminous matter quantitatively and qualitatively. Code here. It directly applies the exponential decay law by assuming a uniform random density of stars and a uniform density of non-luminous matter throughout space. The simulation even cheats massively in favor of Olbers's Paradox by modeling the infinite backdrop of stars at varying distances as a purely luminous wall of light at a fixed, finite and even shortest possible distance beyond the foreground model of direct sampling. This means we have a strict theoretical upper bound on the total light emanating from distant stars. The density of non-luminous matter is controllable as a parameter p. The simulation shows that for even very small values of p, a purely luminous wall would be practically invisible, or be indistinguishable from low-energy uniform background radiation.

If one sets p=0, the entire field of view is indeed saturated by pure, contiguous starlight under this simulation. But for any non-infinitesimal density p of attenuating matter, the visualization -- and the mathematical solution for expected light intensity over all points in space--converges sharply towards a model that closely resembles what we see in our night sky, regardless of all other parameter settings.

In the following two images, the absorption value is increased only slightly, very close to zero at first: Very low absorption parameter

Low absorption parameter

In both images, there is a perfectly bright wall of simulated stars a short, fixed distance away from the observer. Radiation from that wall leaks and is visible as a uniform grey background when the simulated wall is very close and the density of attenuating matter approaches zero, but if the wall of light is slightly more distant or the density of attenuating matter is only slightly increased, the background very rapidly approaches pitch black, despite there still being an infinite number of perfectly bright stars intersecting every possible line of sight.

You can bump up the stellar density, radii and luminosity as high as you want, and even a tiny percentage of non-luminous matter still overwhelms the resultant apparent brightness calculations with the exponential decay induced by material attenuation.

Of course arguments about thermodynamics I often see cropping up around this subject are just begging the question. How nonluminous matter is able to be there and coexist with stars is a separate matter of discussion. (How stars got there is too, come to think of it). The fact that it is there and that we know it is there, even at great distances, disproves the idea that Olbers's paradox is a paradox at all, as it completely fails to falsify an infinite and uniform universe given what we know. If one demands thermal equilibrium as a consequence of the "static universe" claim, then stars would not exist, invalidating the most basic premise of the thought experiment. But stars do exist, and so does interstellar matter. Therefore observationally, a humble law of 18th-century optics actually provides a perfectly satisfactory model that fully explains the dark night sky even with an infinite universe filled with a uniform density of stars. It also predicts uniform, low-wavelength cosmic background radiation.

In case someone thinks this idea is absurd, that even a small amount of matter between stars can block nearly all of the light from them, remember that despite how brightly the Sun shines at noonday and how close it is to the Earth, you can block almost all of that light using a thin cardboard cereal box or a parasol consisting of cloth a couple millimeters thick. This gives you an idea of how effective exponential attenuation is. Can there not be the equivalent matter of one millimeter of cardboard between you and a star 3 billion light years away, among the dust, the stellar remnants, the comets, the hypothesized Oort-like clouds, the planets, the gas clouds, etc.? If not, then what are stars (and their systems) made of?

So no, Olbers' Paradox is not really a paradox at all as soon as we updated it with 1930s observational astronomy and do the math based on what we have observed, that there is indeed non-luminous matter between ourselves and distant stars, and it has an exponential decay effect.

The infinite extent and uniform distribution of stars throughout the universe remains completely unfalsified.

Eat your heart out, Orson Pratt.

JWST deep space image

  • Significant overlap among your other answers: https://physics.stackexchange.com/a/805177/25301, https://physics.stackexchange.com/a/805156/25301, https://physics.stackexchange.com/a/805165/25301. Generally speaking, this is looked down upon on this site. – Kyle Kanos Mar 06 '24 at 02:54
  • @KyleKanos Significant overlap among questions: All of them involve the same false premise. It would be a disservice not to make known that the premise is false in each of the answers. That would be far more egregious than bearing some repetition among answers. – pygosceles Mar 06 '24 at 07:26
  • If you are unable to make your point known without copying and pasting, you're probably doing something wrong. Also, you've accrued a bunch of downvotes on these answers, so I suspect that either you're not explaining yourself well enough or you've made an error in your answer somewhere. – Kyle Kanos Mar 06 '24 at 23:32
  • @KyleKanos Questions that rely on the same false premise are the root copy-paste phenomenon: A misunderstanding this prevalent ought to be addressed. I suspect the field is biased against plausible explanations that do not prop up a dogmatic view of a big bang, but maybe that's just me. Objectively this is a valid and mathematically sound explanation if anyone would care to take at least two seconds to double check the math. The onus is on the downvoters to prove my error if they can find one. None has been demonstrated so far. – pygosceles Mar 07 '24 at 00:06
  • Your rudimentary "model" assumes that absorbing material can just keep on absorbing without getting hot. This would be fine in a universe of finite age (although there is no evidence for very significant absorption of visible light out to the edge of the observable universe) but not in an infinitely old one. Indeed the presence of such dust in an infinitely old universe would make the entire universe as we see it impossible., This is Olber's paradox. – ProfRob Mar 29 '24 at 10:45
  • @ProfRob The primary mechanisms are not absorption, but re-radiation, scattering, The Wolfe-Sachs effect and other gravitationally induced redshift. The Earth, Pluto, and every body in the solar system scatters light to maintain a different temperature from other bodies. I recommend reading up on the subject of radiative equilibrium: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiative_equilibrium Again, to presuppose that everything would be the same temperature in an infinitely old universe is to presume the non-existence of stars, which is just begging the question. – pygosceles Mar 30 '24 at 03:02
  • Your "model" code does not include scattering. The Earth et al. only see hot radiation coming from a tiny solid angle in the sky - that is Olber's paradox. – ProfRob Mar 30 '24 at 07:03
  • @ProfRob I am fully aware of what the supposed paradox is. The model incorporates the Beer-Lambert law of attenuation and proves that such a phenomenon by itself is sufficient to eliminate the paradox. Reradiation, scattering and gravitational redshift will be slightly more difficult to model but their net effect will also be darkening of the night sky. – pygosceles Mar 30 '24 at 17:59